Casey Kuffner, Administrator of the Estate of Lonnie Baker v. Saint Joseph Health System, Inc. D/B/A Saint Joseph East

CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedFebruary 10, 2022
Docket2021 CA 000168
StatusUnknown

This text of Casey Kuffner, Administrator of the Estate of Lonnie Baker v. Saint Joseph Health System, Inc. D/B/A Saint Joseph East (Casey Kuffner, Administrator of the Estate of Lonnie Baker v. Saint Joseph Health System, Inc. D/B/A Saint Joseph East) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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Casey Kuffner, Administrator of the Estate of Lonnie Baker v. Saint Joseph Health System, Inc. D/B/A Saint Joseph East, (Ky. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

RENDERED: FEBRUARY 11, 2022, 10:00 A.M. NOT TO BE PUBLISHED

Commonwealth of Kentucky Court of Appeals

NO. 2021-CA-0168-MR

CASEY KUFFNER, ADMINISTRATOR OF THE ESTATE OF LONNIE BAKER; C.R.B., A MINOR BY AND THROUGH HER CO-GUARDIANS, RACHEL KUFFNER AND CASEY KUFFNER; AND CASEY KUFFNER, ADMINISTRATOR OF THE ESTATE OF JAMIE NICOLE BAKER APPELLANTS

APPEAL FROM FAYETTE CIRCUIT COURT v. HONORABLE KIMBERLY N. BUNNELL, JUDGE ACTION NO. 18-CI-02286

SAINT JOSEPH HEALTH SYSTEM, INC. D/B/A SAINT JOSEPH EAST AND KENTUCKY ONE HEALTH, INC. APPELLEES

OPINION REVERSING AND REMANDING

** ** ** ** **

BEFORE: GOODWINE, K. THOMPSON, AND L. THOMPSON, JUDGES. THOMPSON, K., JUDGE: Casey Kuffner, Administrator of the Estate of Lonnie

Baker; C.R.B., a minor by and though her co-guardians, Rachel Kuffner and Casey

Kuffner; and Casey Kuffner, Administrator of the Estate of Jamie Nicole Baker

(collectively the Estate), appeal from the Fayette Circuit Court’s grant of summary

judgment to Saint Joseph Health System, Inc. D/B/A Saint Joseph East and

Kentucky One Health, Inc. (collectively St. Joseph or the hospital), resulting in its

dismissal.

This is a medical malpractice case in which the physician primarily

responsible for Lonnie Baker’s care, Dr. Lynda Newman, has already settled with

the Estate. Additionally, all other parties except for St. Joseph were previously

dismissed. As the issue before us is the appropriateness of the circuit court

granting summary judgment to St. Joseph, our focus will be on the events which

are relevant to determining whether the hospital could be liable.

On June 23, 2017, Baker arrived at the St. Joseph emergency room

(ER), at 6:31 p.m., complaining of chest pain and nausea. He was treated in the

ER by Dr. Newman. At 10:15 p.m., Dr. Newman ordered chest and abdominal

computed tomography (CT) scans without contrast “stat” and they were taken soon

thereafter by radiologist technician Lindsey Barnes. At around 11:00 p.m., the

radiologist, Dr. Raymonda Stevens, interpreted the CT scans and found them

largely unremarkable. Baker was found unresponsive at 1:14 a.m. the next day, a

-2- code was called on him and after extensive resuscitation efforts, Baker was

pronounced dead at 2:42 a.m. A later autopsy concluded that his death was caused

by an ascending aortic dissection with Marfan syndrome, a possible contributing

underlying condition. The Estate filed suit for negligence in causing his death

against Dr. Newman and others, including St. Joseph.

According to Dr. Newman’s deposition, she decided to order the CT

scan of Baker’s chest because she suspected he had possible Marfan syndrome

based on Baker’s stature of six feet, nine inches, and knew that Marfan syndrome

is associated with an elevated risk of dissection of the heart. Dr. Newman

explained she ordered the CT scans without contrast because she was worried

about the adverse effect the contrast dye would have on Baker’s kidneys as he had

an elevated creatinine level in his blood.

According to Dr. Newman’s deposition testimony, she noted in the

electronic order for the CT of Baker’s chest that her reason for ordering the CT

was “dissection,” explaining this is synonymous in conjunction with a chest CT

with “aortic dissection.” Dr. Newman explained that she typed the word

“dissection” in the electronic form order.

However, all the records associated with Baker’s chart (whether

generated by the ER, radiology, or the radiologist), failed to indicate this CT scan

was for dissection. Instead, the orders indicated chest pain, or chest pain, nausea,

-3- and abdominal pain. When shown the order form in Baker’s record which was

apparently prepared by Dr. Newman, Dr. Newman testified that the order was not

as she had prepared it, as it indicated the CT was for “cp” chest pain, which is not

what she typed.

Dr. Newman testified there were a variety of ways she could get a

report from radiology after the CT scans were taken and interpreted by the

radiologist but noted she would have been called on the phone by the radiologist if

it was urgent. Dr. Newman recalled seeing that evening, perhaps on the

radiologist’s initial report on the PAX machine, that the radiologist could not

evaluate for dissection, but that the radiologist did not provide an accompanying

reason why such an evaluation could not be made.

Dr. Newman testified that after she received this information, she did

not order a chest CT with contrast because “number one, the creatinine was too

high, and number two, my suspicion [of a dissection] was too low.” Dr. Newman

explained that her only suspicion for Baker having a dissection with his symptoms

was his stature, and once she knew the radiologist could not look for dissection,

she could have ordered a CT with contrast if she thought it was indicated.

Deposition testimony by the radiology technician, Barnes, who took

Baker’s CT, was that the order she received on her screen in radiology, which is an

-4- order that only goes to radiology, gave “cp” as the reason for the exam and

indicated that Baker “started having chest pains now [it’s] in the belly.”

Barnes testified that according to the history she took from Baker, the

reason for the CT was “general chest and abdominal pain with nausea and

vomiting started today.” She testified that she took the CTs ordered and then

electronically sent those images to radiologist Dr. Stevens.

Barnes testified she did not recall seeing anything indicating Dr.

Newman wanted Baker evaluated for aortic dissection and she had no idea as to

why she would not have gotten that information had Dr. Newman typed such a

request into the ER system. Barnes testified that the proper test for dissection is a

CT with contrast.

Dr. Kimberly Wells, the ER physician who was on duty with Dr.

Newman that night, testified in her deposition that a radiology tech could change

the reason given for the exam on the ordering paperwork, explaining, “I just know

that in my own personal experience, sometimes the reason for the exam or the

indication that I put in doesn’t make it on the final read.”

Dr. Stevens, the radiologist who evaluated Baker’s CT scans, testified

she did not recall seeing a request to evaluate Baker for an aortic dissection. Dr.

Stevens explained that if she had been asked to look for a dissection she would

have noted that in her report instead of chest pain, and she would have called Dr.

-5- Newman and discussed with her that a CT with contrast had to be ordered. Dr.

Stevens testified that she made no statement indicating that radiology could not

assess for dissection, to be transmitted by the PAX machine or otherwise.

St. Joseph previously requested in its interrogatories to the Estate that

the Estate disclose its experts and their anticipated testimony. The Estate identified

three experts, Dr. Gregory Postel (a radiologist), Dr. Luca Vricella (a cardiac

surgeon with a practice focusing on young adults with connective tissue disorders

and aortic problems such as are experienced by those with Marfan syndrome), and

Dr. Emile Bacha (a cardiac surgeon), via Kentucky Rules of Civil Procedure (CR)

26.02 disclosures. In an affidavit by the Estate’s attorney, he affirmed that he

reviewed the disclosures with these witnesses and they agreed with the content of

the disclosures.

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Casey Kuffner, Administrator of the Estate of Lonnie Baker v. Saint Joseph Health System, Inc. D/B/A Saint Joseph East, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/casey-kuffner-administrator-of-the-estate-of-lonnie-baker-v-saint-joseph-kyctapp-2022.